EQUIPMENT FRONT END MODULES INCLUDING MULTIPLE ALIGNERS, ASSEMBLIES, AND METHODS
An equipment front end module may include an equipment front end module body forming an equipment front end module chamber. The equipment front end module body may include plurality of walls. One or more load locks or process chambers may be coupled to one or more first walls. One or more load ports may be provided in one or more second walls, wherein each of the one or more load ports are configured to dock a substrate carrier. A plurality of alignment pedestals may be housed within the equipment front end module chamber. A load/unload robot may be at least partially housed within the equipment front end module chamber, wherein the load/unload robot may include a plurality of blades. Other apparatus and methods are disclosed.
This patent application claims the benefit under 35 U.S.C. § 119(e) of U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/837,271, filed Apr. 23, 2019.
FIELDEmbodiments of the present disclosure relate to equipment front end modules (EFEMs), electronic device processing assemblies, and methods for operating equipment front end modules.
BACKGROUNDProcessing of substrates in semiconductor device manufacturing is carried out in multiple process tools where the substrates travel between the process tools in substrate carriers such as Front Opening Unified Pods (FOUPs). The substrate carriers may be docked to a front wall of an equipment front end module (EFEM) that includes a load/unload robot. The load/unload robot is operable to transfer substrates between the substrate carriers and one or more destinations (e.g., load locks or process chambers) coupled to a rear wall of the EFEM opposite the front wall. However, in some instances, existing EFEMs have certain substrate throughput limitations.
SUMMARYIn some embodiments, equipment front end modules are provided. An equipment front end module includes: an equipment front end module body forming an equipment front end module chamber, the equipment front end module body including a plurality of walls; one or more load locks or process chambers coupled to one or more first walls; one or more load ports provided in one or more second walls, each of the one or more load ports configured to dock a substrate carrier; a plurality of alignment pedestals housed within the equipment front end module chamber; and a load/unload robot at least partially housed within the equipment front end module chamber, the load/unload robot including a plurality of blades.
In some embodiments, electronic device processing assemblies are provided. The electronic device processing assembly includes: an equipment front end module body forming an equipment front end module chamber; one or more load locks coupled to a one or more first walls of the equipment front end module body, the one or more load locks configured to exchange substrates into and out of a transfer chamber or a process chamber; one or more load ports provided in one or more second walls of the equipment front end module body, each of the one or more load ports configured to dock a substrate carrier; a plurality of alignment pedestals housed within the equipment front end module chamber; and a load/unload robot at least partially housed within the equipment front end module chamber, the load/unload robot including a plurality of blades configured to simultaneously transfer multiple substrates between the one or more load ports and the plurality of alignment pedestals.
In some embodiments, a method of operating an equipment front end module is provided. A method includes moving blades of a load/unload robot to a vertically aligned position to access vertically-stacked substrate storage devices; and moving the blades of the load/unload robot to a vertically misaligned position to access a plurality of alignment pedestals simultaneously.
Numerous other aspects and features are provided in accordance with these and other embodiments of the disclosure. Other features and aspects of embodiments of the disclosure will become more fully apparent from the following detailed description, the claims, and the accompanying drawings.
The drawings, described below, are for illustrative purposes and are not necessarily drawn to scale. The drawings are not intended to limit the scope of the disclosure in any way. Wherever possible, the same or like reference numbers will be used throughout the drawings to refer to the same or like parts.
Reference will now be made in detail to the example embodiments provided, which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings. Features of the various embodiments described herein may be combined with each other unless specifically noted otherwise.
In the processing of substrates in electronic device manufacturing, an equipment front end module (EFEM) receives substrates from one or more substrate carriers. The substrate carriers may be docked to load ports located on a front wall thereof (e.g., docked to a load port configured on a front surface of an EFEM body). The EFEM may include an EFEM chamber at least partially formed by the EFEM body.
In order to properly position a substrate prior to transferring the substrate to a processing chamber for processing, prior art EFEMs may include an alignment pedestal that rotates the substrate to a proper rotational orientation prior to processing. In some embodiments, the EFEMs may also include a side storage pod used to store substrates. For example, the side storage pod may store substrates returning from processing in the processing chamber(s). In some embodiments, the substrates may undergo degassing and/or cooling in the side storage pod. A load/unload robot may be located in an EFEM chamber and can deliver the substrates to the alignment pedestal and/or to one or more load locks or process chambers coupled on a wall of the EFEM (e.g., a rear wall thereof). However, such prior art EFEMs may suffer from low throughput. Thus, in accordance with embodiments described herein, enhanced throughput EFEMs are provided.
In one or more embodiments described herein, EFEMs including improved throughput include an EFEM body forming an EFEM chamber, wherein the EFEM body may include a front wall, a rear wall, and a side wall. A plurality of alignment pedestals and a load/unload robot including multiple blades may be housed within the EFEM chamber. Substrates may be transferred simultaneously from a load port and placed simultaneously onto the plurality of alignment pedestals. After the alignment pedestals align the substrates, the substrates may be simultaneously transferred from the plurality of alignment pedestals to one or more load locks or process chambers. Thus, throughput through the EFEM is improved. In some embodiments, the plurality of alignment pedestals can be vertically offset from one another, horizontally offset from one another, or the alignment pedestals can include a combination of vertical and horizontal offsets.
Further details of various embodiments of EFEMs, EFEMs including a plurality of alignment pedestals and a load/unload robot with multiple blades, electronic device processing assemblies, and methods of operating EFEMs providing improved (increased) substrate throughput are further described with reference to
The motion of the various robot arm components of the transfer robot 106 can be controlled by suitable commands to a drive assembly (not shown) containing a plurality of drive motors commanded from a controller 108. Signals from the controller 108 may cause motion of the various robot arms of the transfer robot 106. Suitable feedback mechanisms may be provided for one or more of the robot arms by various sensors, such as position encoders, and the like. Controller 108 can include a suitable processor (e.g., microprocessor(s)), memory, drive units, and sensors that enable communication and control of the transfer robot 106 and a load/unload robot 122. Controller 108 may further control operations of other system components to be described more fully herein, such as load lock apparatus 112, process chambers 110A-110F, process chambers 110A′, 110B′ (
The transfer robot 106 may include interconnected robot arms rotatable about a shoulder axis, which may be approximately centrally located in the transfer chamber 104, for example. Transfer robot 106 may include a base (not shown) that is configured to be attached to a chamber wall (e.g., a chamber floor) forming a lower portion of the transfer chamber 104. However, the transfer robot 106 may be attached to a ceiling in some embodiments (e.g., a chamber ceiling). The transfer robot 106 may be a dual-type robot configured to service twin chambers (e.g., side-by-side process chambers, as shown) when the transfer chamber 104 includes twinned-process chambers (as shown). Other types of process chamber orientations such as radially-oriented process chambers, as well as other types of transfer robots, such as selective compliance articulating robot arm (SCARA) robots, may be used.
The destinations for the transfer robot 106 may be one or more process chambers, such as a first process chamber set 110A, 110B, coupled to a first facet that may be configured and operable to carry out a process on the substrates 105 delivered thereto. Further destinations for the transfer robot 106 may also be a second process chamber set 110C, 110D coupled to a second facet opposite the first process chamber set 110A, 110B. Likewise, the destinations for the transfer robot 106 may also be a third process chamber set 110E, 110F coupled to a third facet that may be opposite a load lock apparatus 112.
The load lock apparatus 112 may include one or more load lock chambers (e.g., load lock chambers 112A, 112B, for example) coupled to a fourth facet. Load lock chambers 112A and 112B that are included in the load lock apparatus 112 may be single wafer load locks (SWLL) chambers, multi-wafer chambers, batch load lock chambers, or combinations thereof. For example, certain load locks, such as load lock chamber 112A, may be used for flow of substrates 105 into the transfer chamber 104, while other load lock chambers, such as load lock chamber 112B, may be used for moving substrates 105 out of the transfer chamber 104.
The process chambers 110A-110F can be configured and operable to carry out any suitable processing of the substrates 105, such as plasma vapor deposition (PVD) or chemical vapor deposition (CVD), etch, annealing, pre-clean, pre-heating, degassing, metal or metal oxide removal, or the like. Other deposition, removal, or cleaning processes may be carried out on substrates 105 contained therein.
Substrates 105 may be received into the transfer chamber 104 from the EFEM 116 and may also exit the transfer chamber 104 to the EFEM 116, through the load lock apparatus 112 that is coupled to one or more first walls (e.g., a rear wall 116R) of the EFEM 116. With additional reference to
The EFEM 116 may include a suitable load/unload robot 122 within the EFEM chamber 116C thereof. The load/unload robot 122 may include a plurality of blades 124 (e.g., dual blades) and can be configured and operational, once a door of a substrate carrier 120 is opened, such as by a door opener mechanism (not shown), to extract multiple substrates 105 from the substrate carrier 120 simultaneously. Once extracted, the blades 124 may move the substrates 105 throughout the EFEM chamber 116C, and eventually into one or more of the load lock chambers 112A, 112B of the load lock apparatus 112. The load/unload robot 122 can be further configured to extract multiple substrates 105 from a substrate carrier 120 at a load port 118 and transfer the multiple substrates 105 simultaneously through the EFEM chamber 116C to a plurality of alignment pedestals 126. The blades 124 can be comprised of an upper blade 124U and a lower blade 124L. The upper blade 124U and lower blade 124L can be configured to a have a vertical offset 1240 (
The alignment pedestals 126 may include devices that orient the substrates 105 to a predetermined direction. For example, the alignment pedestals 126 may optically scan the substrates 105 and identify notches (not shown) located on the substrates 105. The alignment pedestals 126 may then align the substrates 105 by rotating the substrates 105 until the notches are oriented to predetermined directions. Examples of alignment procedures and alignment pedestals are described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 3,972,424; 5,102,280; and 6,275,742.
After alignment at the plurality of alignment pedestals 126, the substrates 105 may be simultaneously transferred into one or more of the load lock chambers 112A, 112B of the load lock apparatus 112. The substrates 105 may then undergo subsequent processing in one or more of the process chambers 110A-110F. In the embodiment illustrated in
The plurality of alignment pedestals 126 may be coupled to one or more walls of the EFEM 116, including the side walls 116S, the front wall 116F, and/or the rear wall 116R. Alternatively, the plurality of alignment pedestals 126 may be coupled to a floor wall 116FL (
The load/unload robot 122 may be configured and operational to extract substrates 105 from the load lock apparatus 112 (or process chambers 110A′, 110B′ in
The EFEM chamber 116C may be provided with an environmental control system 129 including an environmental controller 130 and a purge gas supply 131 configured to provide an environmentally-controlled atmosphere to the EFEM chamber 116C. In particular, the environmental controller 130 may be operational to monitor and/or control environmental conditions within the EFEM chamber 116C. Monitoring may be by way of one or more sensors. In some embodiments, and at certain times, the EFEM chamber 116C may receive a non-reactive gas therein, such as during processing of the substrates 105. The non-reactive gas can be an inert gas such as Argon (Ar), Nitrogen (N2), and/or helium (He) and may be provided from the purge gas supply 131. Other gases may be used. The environmental controller 130 may interface with the controller 108 to synchronize operations within the EFEM 116.
In the depicted embodiment of
The side storage pod apparatus 128 may be enclosed entirely within a retaining enclosure 134, which may also be coupled and sealed to a side wall 116S of the EFEM 116 by any suitable means, such as a gasket, O-ring, or other seals and suitable coupling devices. The side storage containers 128a, 128b may be loaded into and removed from the retaining enclosure 134 through access doors 134d. The access doors 134d allows for easy maintenance and cleaning of the side storage pod chambers 132a, 132b. The access doors 134d also allows for the ability to quickly add new or cleaned side storage containers 128a, 128b therein.
The access doors 134d and the retaining enclosure 134 may be configured to provide a sealed environment surrounding the side storage containers 128a, 128b. In some embodiments, the side storage containers 128a, 128b can be in fixed locations on the side wall 116S of the EFEM 116. Substrates 105 may be transferred to and from the side storage pod chambers 132a, 132b through pod openings 136 in the side storage pod apparatus 128. The pod openings 136 may couple to like openings formed in a side wall 116S of the EFEM 116. The pod openings 136 can remain open at all times, thus allowing unfettered access to substrates 105 stored therein by the blades 124 of the load/unload robot 122. Thus, multiple substrates 105 can be simultaneously inserted into or simultaneously retracted from a side storage pod chamber 132a or 132b of the side storage pod apparatus 128.
Additional reference is made to
The plurality of pod support members 138 are configured to support substrates 105 horizontally thereon at the pod vertical spacing 202. For example, the pod support members 138 may comprise suitable support shelves extending laterally towards each other from each side of the side storage containers 128a and 128b. The pod support members 138 may be configured to support a portion of each substrate 105, such as the edges thereof. The pod support members 138 may be short enough so that they do not interfere with the blades 124 of the load/unload robot 122.
In the depicted embodiment of
The plurality of alignment pedestals 126 may be arranged side-by-side within the EFEM chamber 116C. Two alignment pedestals 126 are shown herein, but more than two alignment pedestals 126 may be provided, such as three, four, or more. The number of blades 124 of the load/unload robot 122 may be equal to the number of alignment pedestals 126. In the depicted embodiment, an upper alignment pedestal 126U and a lower alignment pedestal 126L are provided side-by-side, but with a vertical offset relative to one another. The plurality of alignment pedestals 126 are shown coupled to the side wall 116S at a level lower than the pod openings 136 of the side storage pod apparatus 128. However, other suitable coupling orientations are possible, space allowing, as discussed above.
The upper alignment pedestal 126U and the lower alignment pedestal 126L can be arranged to provide for a vertical offset 204 between the respective support surfaces 226S1 and 226S2 and between substrates 105 (shown dotted in
The pod vertical spacing 202 between the plurality of pod support members 138 within the side storage containers 128a, 128b and the vertical offset 204 between each of the support surfaces 226S1, 226S2 of the plurality of alignment pedestals 126 can be equal to or greater than the vertical offset 1240 (
In the depicted embodiment of
Reference is made to
The range of the overlap 206 between each of substrates 105 positioned on the plurality of alignment pedestals 126 may be within a range of a vertical misalignment between the upper blade 124U and the lower blade 124L of the load/unload robot 122 relative to one another. This vertical misalignment between the upper blade 124U and the lower blade 124L allows for the simultaneous placement and removal of substrates 105 from each of the plurality of alignment pedestals 126. The overlap 206 also allows for the width of the EFEM 116 to be made smaller, while accommodating simultaneous placement of multiple substrates 105 on the alignment pedestals 126. In order to accomplish simultaneous placement of substrates 105 onto the plurality of alignment pedestals 126 with the upper blade 124U and the lower blade 124L, the upper blade 124U and the lower blade 124L can each be rotated apart via the operation of independent rotational movement of the blades 124. In order to avoid supports and the like on the alignment pedestals 126, the upper blade 124U and the lower blade 124L may be moved together and/or apart as the blades 124 access the alignment pedestals 126 or other components.
The resulting offset 304 between the centers 302 of the blades 124 and/or the substrates 105 supported on each of the blades 124 may substantially match a horizontal spacing 207 (
The blades 124 may move in a direction 318A to access the support surfaces 226S1, 226S2 of the alignment pedestals 126. For example, the multiple blades 124 may move in the direction 318A to set substrates 105 onto the support surfaces 226S1, 226S2 or to retrieve aligned substrates 105 from the support surfaces 226S1, 226S2. The blades 124 may move in a direction 318B when moving away from the support surfaces 226S1, 226S2. In some embodiments, the support surface 226S1 may include a plurality of lift points 320A and the support surface 226S2 may include a plurality of lift points 320B. As shown in
Reference is made to
Additional reference is made to
In the embodiment shown in
With additional reference to
It should be readily appreciated that the present disclosure is susceptible of broad utility and application. Many embodiments and adaptations of the present disclosure other than those herein described, as well as many variations, modifications, and equivalent arrangements, will be apparent from, or reasonably suggested by, the present disclosure and the foregoing description thereof, without departing from the substance or scope of the present disclosure. Accordingly, while the present disclosure has been described herein in detail in relation to specific embodiments, it is to be understood that this disclosure is for illustrative purposes and presents examples of the present disclosure and is made merely for purposes of providing a full and enabling disclosure. This disclosure is not intended to be limited to the particular apparatus, assemblies, systems and/or methods disclosed, but, to the contrary, the intention is to cover all modifications, equivalents, and alternatives falling within the scope of the claims.
Claims
1. An equipment front end module, comprising:
- an equipment front end module body forming an equipment front end module chamber, the equipment front end module body including a plurality of walls;
- one or more load locks or process chambers coupled to one or more first walls;
- one or more load ports provided in one or more second walls, each of the one or more load ports configured to dock a substrate carrier;
- a plurality of alignment pedestals housed within the equipment front end module chamber; and
- a load/unload robot at least partially housed within the equipment front end module chamber, the load/unload robot including a plurality of blades.
2. The equipment front end module of claim 1, comprising a side storage pod apparatus coupled to a wall.
3. The equipment front end module of claim 2, wherein a pod opening to the side storage pod apparatus is positioned at a location higher than the plurality of alignment pedestals.
4. The equipment front end module of claim 1, wherein the load/unload robot includes two blades.
5. The equipment front end module of claim 1, wherein the load/unload robot is configured and operable to transfer multiple substrates simultaneously between the one or more load ports and the plurality of alignment pedestals.
6. The equipment front end module of claim 1, wherein at least two of the plurality of alignment pedestals are vertically offset relative to one another.
7. The equipment front end module of claim 6 wherein the substrate carrier comprises a plurality of support members, wherein at least two of the plurality of support members are vertically spaced from each other by a distance that is substantially equal to a distance that at least two of the plurality of alignment pedestals are vertically offset relative to each other.
8. The equipment front end module of claim 6 comprising a side storage pod apparatus, the side storage pod apparatus including pod support members vertically spaced from each other by a spacing that is substantially equal to a distance that at least two of the plurality of alignment pedestals are vertically offset relative to each other.
9. The equipment front end module of claim 6 wherein a distance that at least two of the plurality of alignment pedestals are vertically offset relative to each other ranges from 7 mm to 40 mm.
10. The equipment front end module of claim 6 wherein at least two of the plurality of alignment pedestals at least partially overlap one another.
11. The equipment front end module of claim 10 wherein a distance that at least two of the plurality of alignment pedestals overlap one another ranges from 120 mm to 300 mm.
12. The equipment front end module of claim 1 wherein the load/unload robot is configured to provide a vertical alignment of the plurality of blades relative to one another while accessing the one or more load ports.
13. The equipment front end module of claim 1 wherein load/unload robot is configured to provide a vertical misalignment of the plurality of blades relative to one another while accessing the plurality of alignment pedestals.
14. The equipment front end module of claim 13 wherein the vertical misalignment between the plurality of blades is proportional to a spacing between the plurality of alignment pedestals.
15. An electronic device processing assembly, comprising:
- an equipment front end module body forming an equipment front end module chamber;
- one or more load locks coupled to a one or more first walls of the equipment front end module body, the one or more load locks configured to exchange substrates into and out of a transfer chamber or a process chamber;
- one or more load ports provided in one or more second walls of the equipment front end module body, each of the one or more load ports configured to dock a substrate carrier;
- a plurality of alignment pedestals housed within the equipment front end module chamber; and
- a load/unload robot at least partially housed within the equipment front end module chamber, the load/unload robot including a plurality of blades configured to simultaneously transfer multiple substrates between the one or more load ports and the plurality of alignment pedestals.
16. The electronic device processing assembly of claim 15 wherein at least two of the plurality of alignment pedestals are vertically offset relative to each other.
17. The electronic device processing assembly of claim 16 wherein at least two of the plurality of blades are vertically spaced from each other by a distance that at least two of the plurality of alignment pedestals are vertically offset relative to each other.
18. The electronic device processing assembly of claim 15 wherein at least two of the plurality of alignment pedestals are horizontally spaced from each other.
19. The electronic device processing assembly of claim 18 wherein at least two of the plurality of blades are moveable to be vertically misaligned from each other by a distance that at least two of the plurality of alignment pedestals are horizontally spaced from each other.
20. A method of operating an equipment front end module, comprising:
- moving blades of a load/unload robot to a vertically aligned position to access vertically-stacked substrate storage devices; and
- moving the blades of the load/unload robot to a vertically misaligned position to access a plurality of alignment pedestals simultaneously.
Type: Application
Filed: Apr 15, 2020
Publication Date: Oct 29, 2020
Patent Grant number: 11139190
Inventor: Nicholas Michael Bergantz (Santa Clara, CA)
Application Number: 16/849,969